A busy little beaver was hard at work to build this mind-boggling installation made from recycled wood scraps. <a href="http://www.zachfeuer.com/artists/phoebe-washburn/" target="_blank">Phoebe Washburn</a>, an American installation artist, works primarily in wood and cardboard scraps to build what she calls "spontaneous architecture." Her work explores generative systems based on absurd patterns of production created by banal rules that she sets up when working on an installation. Known for reusing materials from previous installations, Washburn requires a team of assistants to create her complicated <a href="http://inhabitat.com/nyc/softlabs-colorful-sculpture-brings-a-modern-twist-to-little-italys-san-gennaro-festival/">site-specific installations</a> that take on a life of their own.

While not necessarily two subjects you think of together, many people do in fact eat their lunch in places filled with art, like galleries, public parks, plazas, lobbies, etc

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

The main structure is built from blocks of scrap wood that have been repurposed and then ordered from previous installations.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

In this new installation, visitors will smell lunch as well as see it being made and eaten inside.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

Wormholes will provide viewers a peak into the mis-matched world inside.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

Washburn's off-the-wall installations are often named for a play on the sounds and meanings of words.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

Nort, for instance is a version of Ort, is a play on the word Art and was a name she applied to a previous work.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

Some of her other installations are like small cities filled with building-like objects and vegetation, while others are abstract sculptures composed of wood or scraps of cardboard.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

A team of assistants is necessary to help her install her sculptures.

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoebe_Washburn" target="_blank">Washburn describes her art</a>: "My sculptures depend a lot on the spaces where they are shown because they often are anchored into the wall but chance is definitely more of a factor in the final product than is any predetermined design."

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

" I just let the structures evolve by repeating the same action again and again."

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

"The process has a slightly neurotic element in that it involves adding little behavior habits. As silly as it sounds, I often feel as if my assistants and I are beavers building a dam."

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

"The shapes are less about form than they are about the activity involved in amassing and assembling the forms."

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Wood and Cardboard Sculptures-Phoebe Washburn

A busy little beaver was hard at work to build this mind-boggling installation made from recycled wood scraps. Phoebe Washburn, an American installation artist, works primarily in wood and cardboard scraps to build what she calls "spontaneous architecture." Her work explores generative systems based on absurd patterns of production created by banal rules that she sets up when working on an installation. Known for reusing materials from previous installations, Washburn requires a team of assistants to create her complicated site-specific installations that take on a life of their own.